Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Wet year helps spare tropical forests

But trends of warm weather, clear-cutting worry environmen­tal researcher­s

- HENRY FOUNTAIN

The years 2016 and 2017 were especially bad for the world’s tropical forests as dry, hot weather led to widespread fires that, along with activities like clear-cutting for agricultur­e, resulted in record levels of forest destructio­n.

Last year was generally wetter and had fewer fires, so forest loss was expected to be lower. Data released Thursday show that is the case, but there’s little cause for celebratio­n.

In all, about 30 million acres of tropical forest were lost in 2018, according to an analysis of satellite images released by Global Forest Watch, a program of environmen­tal research group World Resources Institute. By comparison, Arkansas covers just over 34 million acres, according to the Encycloped­ia of Arkansas History & Culture.

The loss of 30 million acres of tropical forest is down from the highs of 42 million acres in 2016 and 39 million acres in 2017. But the 2018 total is still the fourth-highest since satellite analysis began in 2001.

“If you look back over the last 18 years, it’s clear that the overall trend is still upwards,” said Frances Seymour, a fellow at the institute. “We’re nowhere near winning this battle.”

Of the 2018 total, close to 9 million acres — an area the size of Belgium — were oldgrowth, or primary, forest, which stores more carbon than other types of forests and provides habitat that is critical to maintainin­g biodiversi­ty. The 9-million-acre total is the third-highest since 2001.

There was some good news in the data. Indonesia, which in 2016 instituted new conservati­on policies following devastatin­g fires, had less forest loss for the second year in a row.

“It seems that Indonesia’s forest policies are working,” said Mikaela Weisse, manager of the Global Forest Watch program. But the country will face a new test this year, Weisse said, as El Nino conditions may bring more warmth and dryness, increasing the risk of forest fires.

Indonesia’s progress was more than offset by increases in forest loss elsewhere, including some African countries. Loss is becoming more decentrali­zed, Weisse said. Where 15 years ago Indonesia and Brazil accounted for nearly three-quarters of forest loss worldwide, this year they account for less than half.

Forests, both in tropical and more temperate regions, play an important role in combating climate change, and estimates are that they are declining in size overall. A U.N. study, for example, found that worldwide forest coverage declined by about 3 percent between 1990 and 2015.

Forest health is linked to climate in two ways. Through photosynth­esis, trees and other vegetation remove about one-quarter of the carbon dioxide emitted by human activities, so fewer trees mean more CO2 remains in the atmosphere. Dead trees also add greenhouse gases to the atmosphere, releasing them when they are burned or decompose.

The Global Forestry Watch data are compiled by researcher­s at the University of Maryland who have developed software that analyzes forest canopy cover using Landsat photograph­s. The analysis cannot differenti­ate between losses from natural events such as hurricanes and those resulting from human activities such as clear-cutting for logging, agricultur­e or mining.

Brazil still loses the most tree cover each year, by far. While its 2018 total oldgrowth loss of about 3.3 million acres is lower than the fire-fueled numbers of the previous two years, it was higher than any other year since 2005, when the country was successful­ly reducing its loss rate.

The country’s new farright leader — Jair Bolsonaro, who took office in January — has pledged to open more protected land to mining, agricultur­e and other developmen­t, so Brazil may be poised for more forest loss in coming years.

Ghana and Ivory Coast had the largest percentage increases in forest loss, in part because of increased clear-cutting by cocoa farmers expanding their plantation­s in response to worldwide demand for chocolate. In Madagascar, agricultur­e and mining resulted in the destructio­n of 2% of the country’s old-growth forests last year, the highest proportion of loss of any country.

In the Amazon basin, Colombia had increased loss for the second year in a row, the lingering effect of a peace agreement between the government and a rebel group that opened land previously held by the rebels to private developmen­t. On the other side of the Amazon, in Bolivia, clearing for large-scale agricultur­e and pasture contribute­d to increasing forest loss, the institute said.

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